Inilah hasil ajaran Islam yg katanya ngelindungi dan ngehormati cewek.

Ga ada alasan unt kaing2 bhw ini bukan ajaran Islam tp budaya setempat, krn
Islam udh ada di Afghanistan sekian abad, dan Islam itu meliputi segala
aspek kehidupan masyarakat (kaing2 orang Islam), jadi bisa dibilang apa yg
ada di Afghan itu adalah hasil Islam.

Kita lihat kasus di Indonesia, di mana daerah yg jadi budaya lokalnya sdh
(sebagian) diganti dgn "budaya" Islam spt Aceh, cewek du Aceh sdh mulai
ditindas spt di Afghan.

Makin kuat Islamnya, makin biadab dan bejad orang Islamnya.


http://www.rawa.org/temp/runews/2013/09/10/dreams-of-a-new-life-not-for-abused-women.html
Dreams of a new life not for abused women She believes that had there been
no shelters for women in Afghanistan many would have turned to sex work for
survival

By Wahidullah

Farzana has been living with her son in a refuge for women in Sangcharak
district, Sar-e-Pol province, ever since her release from jail. Her husband
was killed four years after her marriage, and she spent eight years in jail
for the crime.

Her parents have not seen her since the night of her wedding. They believe
she has sullied the family honour but Farzana insists she did not kill her
husband.

Farzana's story is not unusual. She says she was married to her aunt's
stepson because her father was poor. She was abused and taunted. "We did
not ask for you," her husband's family would say. "Your father donated you
to us."

One day her aunt-turned-mother-in-law went to the hospital to meet her
nephew without telling the men in the family. When Farzana's husband got to
know he told his father who beat his wife so severely that she miscarried.
Farzana says her mother-in-law plotted with one of her nephew's to kill
Farzana's husband, and implicated her in the crime. In the end both women
were arrested, and sent to jail.

Farzana who has a son would like a chance to start a new life but it may be
an impossible dream. The shelter in Sangcharak is her only home for now.
"My parents say they don't have a daughter called Farzana. My brother has
threatened to find and kill me …"

Women's shelters are not acceptable in this patriarchal society where the
only place for a woman is in her husband's home even if she's being beaten
to death.

In 2011, Women for Afghan Women, a non-governmental organisation (NGO)
opened the Sangcharak safe house.

Atefa Hazbar, Balkh provincial director of the NGO, says in a majority of
cases they have succeeded in getting the women's family or husband to take
her back. In some cases the women have remarried. Only seven of the 59
women released into their custody from prison were not rehabilitated.

*Defenceless victim*

Killid interviewed Sadia, 13, in the tiny reception room of the Cooperation
Centre for Afghanistan shelter in Mazar. She sounds desperate. "My husband
was beating me so much I had to escape."

A resident of Sheberghan, capital of Jawzjan province, her father died
three years ago. A year later her mother wanted to marry again but since
the man did not want to be saddled with the responsibility of her children
Sadia was married to her aunt's son, 11 years her senior. Sadia thought she
would be safe in a relative's family but her husband beat her daily on the
instigation of her aunt-turned-mother-in-law and sister-in-law. "They were
constantly carrying tales about me to my husband. That I was not working
even though I was working from morning to night. I was not allowed to leave
the house."

After two years of torture she fled with the help of a relative whose name
she did not want to reveal. He brought her to the safe house in Mazar.

Sadia would like a divorce but she is scared for her life. "If I go home
they will kill me," she says. "I am here (in the safe house) but my
husband's family are saying I am in an illicit relationship with someone
and have gone to Mazar. What they want to do is make trouble for my mother.
Already my stepfather is behaving badly with her."

Sadia says she has nowhere else to go to. "My stepfather will not have me.
Only my uncle has said he will take me to his house," she says.

According to her lawyer, Elham, in her case the court will grant her a
divorce after serving her husband with three summonses, and allow her to go
with her uncle. "Sadia is underage, and her husband does not want to come
to court," he explains. Her uncle may want to arrange her marriage, but
Sadia says, "I never want to marry again."

*Bleak future*

AIHRC's Women's Affairs officer for the north Fawzia Nawabi says "friends"
helped to arrange the marriages of six women abandoned by their families.
"But still there are women for whom neither a husband can be found nor
their families are ready to accept them," she adds.

She believes that had there been no shelters for women in Afghanistan many
would have turned to sex work for survival. Sadly, in many instances where
families have taken back their daughters following mediation by women's
groups "either they have been murdered or their condition so tough that
they commit suicide. For instance a woman was killed by her husband after
two months of her release," Nawabi adds.

*Locked away*

As families crowd the prison yard in the hope of meeting their loved
prisons, 22-year-old Bahar knows no one will come to see her except her
mother who makes secret visits. Bahar is in jail for the murder of her
husband. But she continues to insist that no wife can kill her husband. She
says neighbours killed her husband but her mother-in-law swore she was the
murderer. "I don't have any hope for my future," Bahar says.

Category: Women <http://www.rawa.org/temp/runews/category/women>, HR
Violations <http://www.rawa.org/temp/runews/category/hr-violations> -
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